22 results on '"Racugno P"'
Search Results
2. Residual ST-segment elevation to predict long-term clinical and CMR-derived outcomes in STEMI
- Author
-
Héctor Merenciano-González, Víctor Marcos-Garcés, Jose Gavara, Ana Pedro-Tudela, Maria P. Lopez-Lereu, Jose V. Monmeneu, Nerea Perez, Cesar Rios-Navarro, Elena de Dios, Ana Gabaldón-Pérez, Cristina Albiach, Paolo Racugno, Clara Bonanad, Joaquim Canoves, Francisco J. Chorro, and Vicente Bodi
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Residual ST-segment elevation after ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) has traditionally been considered a predictor of left ventricular (LV) dysfunction and ventricular aneurism. However, the implications in terms of long-term prognosis and cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR)-derived structural consequences are unclear. A total of 488 reperfused STEMI patients were prospectively included. The number of Q wave leads with residual ST-segment elevation > 1 mm (Q-STE) at pre-discharge ECG was assessed. LV ejection fraction (LVEF, %) and infarct size (IS, % of LV mass) were quantified in 319 patients at 6-month CMR. Major adverse cardiac events (MACE) were defined as all-cause death and/or re-admission for acute heart failure (HF), whichever occurred first. During a mean follow-up of 6.1 years, 92 MACE (18.9%), 39 deaths and 53 HF were recorded. After adjustment for baseline characteristics, Q-STE (per lead with > 1 mm) was independently associated with a higher risk of long-term MACE (HR 1.24 [1.07–1.44] per lead, p = 0.004), reduced ( 30% of LV mass) IS (HR 1.43 [1.11–1.85] per lead, p = 0.006) at 6-month CMR. Patients with Q-STE ≥ 2 leads (n = 172, 35.2%) displayed lower MACE-free survival, more depressed LVEF, and larger IS at 6-month CMR (p
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Residual ST-segment elevation to predict long-term clinical and CMR-derived outcomes in STEMI
- Author
-
Merenciano-González, Héctor, Marcos-Garcés, Víctor, Gavara, Jose, Pedro-Tudela, Ana, Lopez-Lereu, Maria P., Monmeneu, Jose V., Perez, Nerea, Rios-Navarro, Cesar, de Dios, Elena, Gabaldón-Pérez, Ana, Albiach, Cristina, Racugno, Paolo, Bonanad, Clara, Canoves, Joaquim, Chorro, Francisco J., and Bodi, Vicente
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Longitudinal strain in remote non-infarcted myocardium by tissue tracking CMR: characterization, dynamics, structural and prognostic implications
- Author
-
Gavara, Jose, Rodriguez-Palomares, Jose F., Rios-Navarro, Cesar, Valente, Filipa, Monmeneu, Jose V., Lopez-Lereu, Maria P., Ferreira-Gonzalez, Ignacio, Garcia del Blanco, Bruno, Otaegui, Imanol, Canoves, Joaquim, de Dios, Elena, Perez, Nerea, Racugno, Paolo, Bonanad, Clara, Minana, Gema, Marcos, Victor, Barrabes, Jose A., Evangelista, Arturo, Moratal, David, Bayes-Genis, Antoni, Nunez, Julio, Chorro, Francisco J., and Bodi, Vicente
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. La s.r.l. a capitale ribassato
- Author
-
Gabriele Racugno
- Subjects
Commercial law ,K1000-1395 - Published
- 2020
6. Strumenti di allerta ed emersione anticipata della crisi nel nuovo CCII Codice della crisi di impresa e dell'insolvenza
- Author
-
Gabriele Racugno
- Subjects
Commercial law ,K1000-1395 - Abstract
SOMMARIO: 1. La salvaguardia dell’impresa. – 2. L’allerta e gli indicatori. – 3.1. Gli squilibri di carattere reddituale. – 3.2. Gli squilibri di carattere patrimoniale. – 3.3. Gli squilibri di carattere finanziario. – 4. La crisi e l’insolvenza prospettica. – 5. I presupposti della continuità aziendale. – 6. Strumenti di allerta e obblighi di segnalazione. – 7. Nota bibliografica.
- Published
- 2019
7. Characterization and implications of the dynamics of eosinophils in blood and in the infarcted myocardium after coronary reperfusion.
- Author
-
Cesar Rios-Navarro, Jose Gavara, Veronica Vidal, Clara Bonanad, Paolo Racugno, Antoni Bayes-Genis, Gema Miñana, Oliver Husser, Ricardo Oltra, Julio Nuñez, Francisco J Chorro, Vicente Bodi, and Amparo Ruiz-Sauri
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
OBJECTIVE:We characterized the dynamics of eosinophils in blood and in the infarcted myocardium in patients and in a swine model of reperfused myocardial infarction (MI). The association of eosinophil dynamics with various outcomes was assessed. METHODS:Serial eosinophil count and pre-discharge cardiac magnetic resonance were carried out in a prospective series of 620 patients with a first ST-elevation MI. In a swine model of reperfused MI, the dynamics of circulating eosinophils and their presence in the infarcted myocardium were determined. In autopsies from chronic MI patients, eosinophils were quantified. RESULTS:Patient eosinophil count sharply decreased 12h post-reperfusion compared to arrival. A lower minimum eosinophil count was associated with more extensive edema, microvascular obstruction, and infarct size as measured by cardiac magnetic resonance, and also with a higher rate of cardiac events (death, re-infarction, or heart failure) during follow-up. In the experimental model, eosinophil count boosted during ischemia and dropped back immediately post-reperfusion. Myocardial samples revealed progressive eosinophil migration into the infarcted myocardium, especially areas with microvascular obstruction. Markers of eosinophil maturation and survival (interleukin-5), degranulation (eosinophil cationic protein) and migration (eotoxin-1) were detected in the blood of patients, and in porcine myocardium. Eosinophil infiltration was detected in autopsies from chronic MI patients. CONCLUSION:Eosinopenia post-MI was associated with an impaired cardiac structure and adverse events. The decay in circulating eosinophils soon after reperfusion mirrors their migration into the infarcted myocardium, as reflected by their presence in heart samples from swine and patients. Further studies are needed to understanding this unexplored pathway and its therapeutic implications.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Analysis of the linear correlation coefficient using pseudo-likelihoods
- Author
-
Bertolino, F. and Racugno, W.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Vasodilator Stress CMR and All-Cause Mortality in Stable Ischemic Heart Disease: A Large Retrospective Registry.
- Author
-
Marcos-Garces, Victor, Gavara, Jose, Monmeneu, Jose V., Lopez-Lereu, Maria P., Bosch, Maria J., Merlos, Pilar, Perez, Nerea, Rios-Navarro, Cesar, De Dios, Elena, Bonanad, Clara, Racugno, Paolo, Bellver Navarro, Alejandro, Ventura Perez, Bruno, Aguilar Botella, Jose, Ventura, Silvia, Mainar, Luis, Canoves, Joaquim, Pellicer, Mauricio, Moratal, David, and Miñana, Gema
- Abstract
This study explored the association of ischemic burden, as measured by vasodilator stress cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR), with all-cause mortality and the effect of revascularization on all-cause mortality in patients with stable ischemic heart disease (SIHD). In patients with SIHD, the association of ischemic burden, derived from vasodilator stress CMR, with all-cause mortality and its role for decision-making is unclear. The registry consisted of 6,389 consecutive patients (mean age: 65 ± 12 years; 38% women) who underwent vasodilator stress CMR for known or suspected SIHD. The ischemic burden (at stress first-pass perfusion imaging) was computed (17-segment model). The effect of CMR-related revascularization (within the following 3 months) on all-cause mortality was retrospectively explored using the electronic regional health system registry. During a 5.75-year median follow-up, 717 (11%) deaths were documented. In multivariable analyses, more extensive ischemic burden (per 1-segment increase) was independently related to all-cause mortality (hazard ratio: 1.04; 95% confidence interval: 1.02 to 1.07; p < 0.001). In 1,032 1:1 matched patients using a limited number of variables (516 revascularized, 516 non-revascularized), revascularization within the following 3 months was associated with less all-cause mortality only in patients with extensive CMR-related ischemia (>5 segments, n = 432; 10% vs. 24%; p = 0.01). In a large retrospective registry of unselected patients with known or suspected SIHD who underwent vasodilator stress CMR, extensive ischemic burden was related to a higher risk of long-term, all-cause mortality. Revascularization was associated with a protective effect only in the restricted subset of patients with extensive CMR-related ischemia. Further research will be needed to confirm this hypothesis-generating finding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Prognostic Value of Strain by Tissue Tracking Cardiac Magnetic Resonance After ST-Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction.
- Author
-
Gavara, Jose, Rodriguez-Palomares, Jose F., Valente, Filipa, Monmeneu, Jose V., Lopez-Lereu, Maria P., Bonanad, Clara, Ferreira-Gonzalez, Ignacio, Garcia del Blanco, Bruno, Rodriguez-Garcia, Julian, Mutuberria, Maria, de Dios, Elena, Rios-Navarro, Cesar, Perez-Sole, Nerea, Racugno, Paolo, Paya, Ana, Minana, Gema, Canoves, Joaquim, Pellicer, Mauricio, Lopez-Fornas, Francisco J., and Barrabes, Jose
- Abstract
Abstract Objectives The aim of this study was to evaluate the prognostic value of strain as assessed by tissue tracking (TT) cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) soon after ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). Background The prognostic value of myocardial strain as assessed post-STEMI by TT-CMR is unknown. Methods The authors studied the prognostic value of TT-CMR in 323 patients who underwent CMR 1 week post-STEMI. Global (average of peak segmental values [%]) and segmental (number of altered segments) longitudinal (LS), circumferential, and radial strain were assessed using TT-CMR. Global and segmental strain cutoff values were derived from 32 control patients. CMR-derived left ventricular ejection fraction, microvascular obstruction, and infarct size were determined. Results were validated in an external cohort of 190 STEMI patients. Results During a median follow-up of 1,085 days, 54 first major adverse cardiac events (MACE), which included 10 cardiac deaths, 25 readmissions for heart failure, and 19 readmissions for reinfarction were documented. MACE was associated with more severe abnormalities in all strain indexes (p < 0.001), although only global LS was an independent predictor (p < 0.001). The MACE rate was higher in patients with a global LS of ≥−11% (22% vs. 9%; p = 0.001). After adjustment for baseline and CMR variables, global LS (hazard ratio [HR]: 1.21; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.11 to 1.32; p < 0.001) was associated with MACE. In the external validation cohort, a global LS ≥−11% was seen in a higher proportion of patients with MACE (34% vs. 9%; p < 0.001). Global LS predicted MACE after adjustment for baseline and CMR variables (HR: 1.18; 95% CI: 1.04 to 1.33; p = 0.008). The addition of global LS to the multivariate models, including baseline and CMR variables, did not significantly improve the categorical net reclassification improvement index in either the study group (−0.015; p = 0.7) or in the external validation cohort (−0.019; p = 0.9). Conclusions TT-CMR provided prognostic information soon after STEMI. However, it did not substantially improve risk reclassification beyond traditional CMR indexes. Graphical abstract [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Non-lipid mediated cardiovascular effect of trnasdermal estradiol
- Author
-
Paoletti, Am, Cagnacci, Angelo, Soldani, R, Murgia, C, Romagnino, S, Meloni, A, Racugno, P, Guerriero, S, and Melis, Gb
- Published
- 1993
12. Cognitive decline and depressive symptoms in late-life are associated with statin use: evidence from a population-based study of Sardinian old people living in their own home.
- Author
-
Mandas, Antonella, Congiu, Maria G., Abete, Claudia, Dessì, Sandra, Manconi, Paolo E., Musio, Monica, Columbu, Silvia, and Racugno, Walter
- Subjects
COGNITION disorders ,MENTAL depression ,STATINS (Cardiovascular agents) ,DYSLIPIDEMIA ,MENTAL health of older people - Abstract
Objectives: This study was designed to provide further insights into the effects of dyslipidemia (Dys-y) and use of statins (St-y) on cognitive functions and mood in older people. Methods: Three hundred and twenty-nine subjects aged ≥ 65 years were screened for cognitive dysfunction using mini mental state examination (MMSE). The geriatric depression scale (GDS) was used to detect depression. Interview questionnaires surveyed activities of daily living (ADL) and instrumental ADL (IADL), as well as other functional disabilities. The presence of neutral lipids (NLs) in cytoplasm of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) was determined with the Oil red O (ORO) staining. Results: There was no significant difference in MMSE and GDS scores between normal (Dys-n) and Dys-y. However, when Dys-y subjects were divided into St-y and non-statin users (St-n), significant differences emerged in the scores of MMSE and GDS: St-y had lower MMSE and higher GDS than St-n. Multiple correspondence analysis and logistic regression provided further evidence that elderly St-y were much more likely to suffer of cognitive impairment and depression than St-n. Another interesting finding was that the intensity of NL-PBMCs measured by ORO staining was greater in subjects with altered MMSE compared with cognitively normal subjects. In addition St-y had higher ORO score than St-n. Discussion: This is an observational study and cannot, therefore, prove a causal relationship between St-y in the elderly and a higher cognitive decline, nevertheless it provides substantial indications that caution should be exercised in the provision of statins in elderly subjects to avoid accelerated memory loss. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Ticagrelor in patients with diabetes and stable coronary artery disease with a history of previous percutaneous coronary intervention (THEMIS-PCI): a phase 3, placebo-controlled, randomised trial
- Author
-
Deepak L Bhatt, Philippe Gabriel Steg, Shamir R Mehta, Lawrence A Leiter, Tabassome Simon, Kim Fox, Claes Held, Marielle Andersson, Anders Himmelmann, Wilhelm Ridderstråle, Jersey Chen, Yang Song, Rafael Diaz, Shinya Goto, Stefan K James, Kausik K Ray, Alexander N Parkhomenko, Mikhail N Kosiborod, Darren K McGuire, Robert A Harrington, Vladimir Santos, Ashit Jain, Irina Lendel, Michael Russo, W H Haught, Manuel Bouza, Harinder Gogia, Supratim Banerjee, George Kichura, Louis Kantaros, Francisco Padron, Rakesh Passi, Jay Stone, Michael Pursley, Michael D'Urso, Timothy Gardner, James Bennett, Khaled Nour, Satinder Saini, Wenwu Zhang, Dharam Kumbhani, Dustin Thomas, Dominick Angiolillo, Barry Bertolet, Amaury Roman-Miranda, Robert Black, Ramin Manshadi, Carlos Vaca, Antonio Blanco, Mark Napoli, David Brabham, Ayim Akyea-Djamson, Pratik Desai, Sudhir Prasada, Ajit Khaira, Leslie Forgosh, Ira Lieber, Guillermo Umpierrez, Dinesh Singal, Juan Londono, Neil Fraser, Jose Ruiz, Damaris Vega, Lilia Rodriguez, Christopher Brown, Faizullah Syed, Guarav Aggarwala, William Eaves, Michael Foster, Dinesh Gupta, David Avino, Wail Asfour, Glen Tonnessen, Xue-Qiao Zhao, Narendra Singh, Andrew Brockmyre, Norman Lepor, Nicolas Shammas, David Blick, Steven Hearne, John Prodafikas, Edgar Carell, Mark Izzo, Amin Karim, Bosh Zakhary, Mahmoud Atieh, Steven Leichter, Charles Meadows, David Hotchkiss, Mazen Abu-Fadel, Alan Wiseman, Jeffrey Bander, Mahesh Shah, Subhash Banerjee, Ricky Ganim, Karen Sopko, Misal Khan, Ramon Lloret, Troy Weirick, Rajendra Mehta, Udho Thadani, Anuj Bhargava, Mikhail Kosiborod, Jaynier Moya, Cezar Staniloae, Yamirka D Guerra, Anil Chhabra, Douglas Kosmicki, Wassim Shaheen, Akber Mohammed, J'Cinda Bitters, Jan Pattanayak, Julian Javier, Sunny Srivastava, Roland Phillips, Jessie Al-Amin, Michael Lillestol, Patrick Simpson, Lydie Hazan, Amit Amin, Gopi Shah, Denes Korpas, Bruce Platt, Jim Dickert, Orlando Puente, Louis Hiotis, Timothy Doyle, Raj Rajan, Alan Meholick, Christian Gring, Elie Hage-Korban, Robert Feldman, Harry Colfer, Samuel Butman, Malcolm Foster, Terence Hart, Randall Huling, Shervin Eshaghian, Ofsman Quintana, Deanna Cheung, Franklin Handel, Mara Rodriguez, David Suh, Paul Gordon, Gregg Pressman, Michael Bauer, William French, Mark Barettella, Sridhar Chatrathi, Damodhar Suresh, Ronald Goldberg, Mark Huth, Liwa Younis, Aref Rahman, Richard Mascolo, Michelle Welch, Randeep Suneja, Stephen Smith, Scott Shurmur, John Agaiby, Ahmad Jingo, Janice Johnston, Mary Beth, Anthony Vlastaris, Susan Kemp, Hamid Taheri, Edward Pereira, Michael Deyoung, Zafir Hawa, Ray Smith, Thomas Galski, Samer Garas, M Reddy, Susheel Sharma, Joeseph Hargrove, Charles Treasure, Ronald Emerson, Tariq Haddad, Kathryn Rohr, Larry Levinson, Raul Gaona, Barry Uretsky, Hiralal Maheshwari, Denny Lee, Stephanie Kinnaman, Robert Singal, Jeffrey Geohas, Osvaldo Gigliotti, Ajit Raisinghani, Charanjit Khurana, Brent Hella, Michael Kelberman, Steven Voyce, Sanjay Singh, Eric Lo, Pradeep Singh, Ross Goodfellow, Stuart Fischer, Richard Lorraine, Traci Turner, Jeffrey Shanes, Robert Busch, Robert Broker, Michelle Zaniewski, Kevin Pounds, Giselle Debs-Perez, Stephen Ong, Brad Frandsen, Douglas Fullington, Naseem Jaffrani, Ahtaram Khan, Marcus Lee, Joe Pouzar, George Revtyak, Julian Gonzalez, Samer Nakhle, Abel Murillo, Douglas Young, Sashi Makam, Mushtaq Syed, Kevin Woolf, Paul Grena, Sarab Alfata, Sharan Mahal, David Hoffman, Tinoy Kizhakekuttu, Joseph Deering, Janak Bhavsar, Scott Mikesell, William Wilson, Vance Wilson, Salah El, Francis Spinale, Vinod Kannarkat, Sunder Rao, Lenita Hanson, John Bertsch, Elena Gonzalez-Ortiz, Norma Severino, John Willis, Joel Schock, Ladan Bakhtari, Raul Gazmuri, Saadat Ansari, Jason Hall, Arvind Mehta, Neal Shealy, Stuart Zarich, Deovrat Singh, Kishor Vora, Nabil Andrawis, Darron Molter, David Maron, Jose Cardona, Ronald D'Agostino, Tamjeed Arshad, Rodney Samaan, David Jones, Dale Presser, John Heath, Sandy Green, George Bittar, Sheldon Henry, David Korn, John Schmedtje, Venkatesh Nadar, Bruce Graham, Ajay Labroo, Leonardo Clavijo, Hal Roseman, Gilbert Ledesma, Robert Rosen, Isaac Dor, William Kirby, Jennefer Sutton, Frank Eder, Bruce Iteld, Jose Gomez-Cortes, Maurice Buchbinder, Joseph Kasper, Antonio Terrelonge, Gustavo Torres, Ted Jagielo, Jose Alvarez, Yehuda Handelsman, Mario Guillen, Randall Richwine, Lorena Lewy-Alterbaum, Clinton Corder, Moogali Arvind, David Bolshoun, Magdy Mikhail, Stephen Minton, Odilon Alvarado, J Abbott, Brett Cauthen, Ryan Welter, Randy Mintz, John Cox, Annette Quick, Melvin Weiss, Johnny Dy, James Zebrack, Glenn Gandelman, Vinayak Hegde, Marc Silver, Michele DeGregorio, William Lawson, Christopher Paa, Anna Bortnick, Merrill Krolick, Rodolfo Sotolongo, Jorge Cheirif, Priya Kumar, Preetham Jetty, Ambar Patel, Mariusz Kruk, Iwona Kobielusz-Gembala, Barbara Rewerska, Adam Madrzejewski, Krzysztof Milewski, Jerzy Cygler, Joanna Petryka-Mazurkiewicz, Waldemar Jastrzebski, Janusz Korecki, Wojciech Fil, Janusz Prokopczuk, Anna Bochenek, Marek Wujkowski, Robert Witek, Piotr Konczakowski, Pawel Miekus, Marcin Szczasny, Wlodzimierz Musial, Krzysztof Cymerman, Jacek Lampart, Jacek Mikosinski, Slawomir Szynal, Issa Fares, Grzegorz Opolski, Stanislaw Mazur, Beata Wozakowska-Kaplon, Renata Bijata-Bronisz, Lukasz Wierucki, Beata Losa, Grzegorz Drelich, Marek Konieczny, Pawel Starczewski, Lidia Pawlowicz, Pawel Jesionowski, Jaroslaw Jurowiecki, Jacek Gniot, Mariusz Czyzycki, Karol Stania, Izabela Kucharczyk-Bauman, Benita Busz-Papiez, Agnieszka Karczmarczyk, Wanda Sudnik, Alina Koszek, Piotr Kolodziej, Bartosz Skwarna, Nicolás Jaramillo, Maciej Jankowski, Wojciech Czochra, Leszek Kinasz, Beata Miklaszewicz, Teresa Stasinska, Wladyslaw Pluta, Marcin Basiak, Teresa Rusicka, Izabela Niedbal-Yahfouf, Grazyna Popenda, Romuald Korzeniak, Agnieszka Mirek, Rafal Mariankowski, Lukasz Wojnowski, Marek Korol, Jacek Baszak, Piotr Podolec, Wojciech Piesiewicz, Aleksander Zurakowski, Carlos Luengas, Marek Skura, Piotr Pilecki, Piotr Majchrzak, Ewa Krzyzagórska, Marcin Drozd, Barbara Kaczmarek, Teresa Sliwinska, Katarzyna Zelazowska, Rafal Sztembis, Katarzyna Landa, Lidia Matyszczak-Toniak, Krzysztof Strojek, Marek Piepiorka, Robert Malinowski, Maria Górska, Edyta Stolarczyk-Sowa, Leszek Romanowski, Elzbieta Zinka, Zygfryd Reszka, Joanna Skierkowska, Anna Uzunow, Ewa Laskowska-Derlaga, Ekaterina Puntus, Elena D Kosmacheva, Natalia Koziolova, Prokhor Pavlov, Tatiana Supryadkina, Yury Didenko, Philipp Kopylov, Andrei Kazakov, Sergei Aksentiev, Elena Vishneva, Alexey Repin, Olga Smolenskaya, Olga Mantserova, Oleg Khrustalev, Elena Privalova, Vladimir Konstantinov, Svetlana Boldueva, Andrey Ezhov, Alexander Chernyavsky, Gadel Kamalov, Albert Galyavich, Galina Zubeeva, Galina Nechaeva, Sergey Shustov, Nino Dzhaiani, Tatiana Treshkur, Nataliya Osokina, Alexey Panov, Elena Shutemova, Valeriy Makukhin, Tatiana Kropotina, Larisa Tsyba, Yuri Karpov, J M Sizova, Marina Ballyuzek, Nikolay Tarasov, Elena Demchenko, Olga Barbarash, Valentin Moiseev, Valentin Markov, Vadim Kuznetsov, Inna Viktorova, Igor Sergienko, Lyudmila Ermoshkina, Niyaz Khasanov, Tatiana Khlevchuk, Andrey Baglikov, Sergey Shalaev, Elena Zonova, Elena Reznik, Larisa Haisheva, Tatyana Morugova, Nikita Lomakin, Alexander Vishnevsky, Yuri Shvarts, Olga Magnitskaya, Marina Mikhailusova, Elena Pavlysh, Igor Libov, Anna Zateyschikova, Victor Kostenko, Anton Edin, Yaroslava Khovaeva, Konstantin Zakharov, Raisa Stryuk, Vladimir Khirmanov, Sergey Kanorskiy, Sergey Yakushin, Anna Barabashkina, Hongwei Li, Qiang Zhao, Jian Zhang, Jianhua Ma, Yong He, Ming Luo, Aidong Zhang, Ningru Zhang, Yingru Chai, Genshan Ma, Hao Wang, Zhigang Liu, Lanjie He, Zhifang Song, Xiaolin Dong, Liang Tao, Zhanquan Li, Xi Su, Xiangqing Kong, Heping Niu, Junbo Ge, Zhurong Luo, Wenjun Huang, Daoquan Peng, Zuyi Yuan, Maria Milanova, Doncho Tenev, Antoni Gogov, Dimitar Karageorgiev, Todor Kolchev, Nikolay Rusev, Nikolina Georgieva, Rumen Kondov, Veselin Rusinov, Ivo Petrov, Georgi Stanchev, Mariana Konteva, Adriana Dincheva, Zdravka Yaneva, Ralitsa Vatova, Katya Ilieva, Nikolai Runev, Borislav Kolomanov, Ivan Petrov, Nikolay Iliev, Snezhanka Tisheva, Boryana Chompalova, Maria Tokmakova, Dimitar Raev, Kolyo Byanov, Dimitar Markov, Lenko Mihov, Atanas Mihov, Nora Milcheva, Milen Minchev, Mihail Mollov, Borislav Borisov, Tihomir Tihchev, Venelin Karakolev, Bojidar Dimov, Svetoslav Georgiev, Lachezar Smilov, Bon K Koo, Taehoon Ahn, Soon J Hong, Junghan Yoon, Seok K Oh, Myung H Jeong, Doo-Il Kim, Kiyuk Chang, Weon Kim, Joo-Yong Hahn, Kwang S Cha, Jung-Hee Lee, Si-Wan Choi, Chang-Wook Nam, In-Ho Chae, Yong H Park, Seung-Jea Tahk, Won-Yong Shin, Jei-Keon Chae, Byung J Kim, Jang-Whan Bae, Woo J Park, Seung W Rha, Young J Choi, Jin-Yong Hwang, Hun S Park, Luciano Baracioli, Fabio Guimaraes, Eduardo Vasconcellos, José Saraiva, Adamastor Pereira, Queulla Santos, Paulo Rossi, Lilia Maia, Miguel Madeira, Marcio Pereira, Roberto Botelho, Gilmar Reis, Freddy Eliaschewitz, Joao Borges, Carlos Nascimento, Jose A Fortes, Weimar de Souza, Pedro Pimentel, Miguel Hissa, Marcos Franchetti, Dalton Precoma, Costantino Ortiz, Mauro Hernandes, Wladmir Saporito, Fabio R dos Santos, Adrian Kormann, Fernando Neuenschwander, Oscar Dutra, Nelson Rassi, Luiz Tanajura, Juliana Souza, Delcio S Junior, Paulo Leaes, Adriana Forte, Teresa C Bonansea, Jose Marin, Bruno Machado, Maria J Cerqueira, Frederico Silva, Yorghos Michalaros, Euler Manenti, Cintia Cercato, Estevao Figueiredo, Ming-En Liu, Yi-Chih Wang, Tsung-Ming Lee, Chih Fang, Yen-Wen Wu, Kwo-Chang Ueng, Huey-Herng Sheu, Wen T Lai, I-Chang Hsieh, Zhih-Cherng Chen, Mu-Jang Lee, Chern Chiang, Kou-Gi Shyu, Chien-Hsun Hsia, Guang-Yuan Mar, Shih-Hung Chan, Chih-Cheng Wu, Wei-Kung Tseng, Kuan-Cheng Chang, Hung-I Yeh, Ji-Hung Wang, Charles Hou, Inna Sorokina, Maryna Dolzhenko, Olha Horoshko, Oleksandr Karpenko, Leonid Rudenko, Igor Vakaliuk, Anna Kulyk, Olena Levchenko, Oleksandr Prokhorov, Dmytro Reshotko, Mykhaylo Sorokivskyy, Nataliia Velichko, Valentyn Maslovskyi, Zinaida Teliatnikova, Sergiy Dotsenko, Olena Krakhmalova, Igor Kraiz, Viktoria Zharinova, Larysa Bula, Igor Kaydashev, Valeriy Molodtsov, Lesya Rasputina, Viktoriya Pidlisna, Olena Lysunets, Anatoliy Kravchenko, Liubomyr Glushko, Tetyana Khomazyuk, Yevgeniya Svyshchenko, Oleksandr Parkhomenko, Boris Mankovsky, Orest Abrahamovych, Andriy Yagensky, Mykola Stanislavchuk, Larisa Vasilyeva, Liubov Sokolova, Oleg Sychov, Vira Tseluyko, Igor Kyrychenko, Mykola Rishko, Sergiy Furkalo, Richard Gallo, Olivier Bertrand, Shamir Mehta, Christian Constance, Bruce Sussex, Remo Zadra, Simon Kouz, Raja Chehayeb, Amritanshu Pandey, Danielle Dion, Gordon Bailey, Laurie Hill, Krishnan Ramanathan, Micha Dorsch, Alykhan Nanji, Mohan Babapulle, Martine Montigny, Gilbert Gosselin, Payam Dehghani, Dennis Rupka, Michel Le May, Francis Pichette, Francois St-Maurice, Patrick Teefy, Samer Mansour, Saleem Kassam, Stephen Cheung, Anthony D Siega, Dennis O'Keefe, Eric Sabbah, Alan Bell, Guy Chouinard, Brian Wong, Mark Miller, Daniel Gaudet, Pierre Lachance, Iqbal Bata, Robert Petrella, Denis Gossard, Richard Dumas, Douglas Ing, Hagop Boyrazian, Ricardo Bessoudo, Thao T Huynh, Randy Hart, Jasmin Belle-Isle, Dinkar Shukla, Allan Kelly, Giuseppe Mazza, James Cha, Sam Henein, Andre Frechette, Saul Vizel, Joanne F Liutkus, Michael O'Mahony, Frank Halperin, Jacobus Kooy, John Graham, Allan Bailey, Ronald Wojcik, Igor Wilderman, Tibor Turi, Ákos Motyovszki, Béla Merkely, Csaba Király, Péter Andrássy, Zsolt Sárszegi, Tibor Fülöp, Zsolt Zilahi, István Édes, Andras Papp, Gábor Müller, Anna Czigány, Szilárd Zólyomi, László Korányi, János Takács, Ferenc Juhász, Bela Benczur, Sándor Kancz, András Földi, András C Nagy, Judit Bakai, István Greschik, László Püski, László Nagy, Róbert Kirschner, Roman Kuchar, Petr Hajek, Ladislav Busak, Daniel Michalik, Ivo Matyasek, Ivana Marusincova, Dusan Kucera, Ondrej Jerabek, Michaela Honkova, Vratislav Dedek, Ivan Rihacek, Pavel Kos, Josef Slaby, Martina Machkova, Eva Zidkova, Lubomir Elbl, Hana Grunfeldova, Jiri Carda, Vladimir Mrozek, Jiri Maly, Richard Milkovic, Jan Malecha, Hana Skalicka, Ivo Oral, Eva Krcova, Libor Lisa, Jan Belohlavek, Roman Miklik, Ondrej Cermak, Jana Bednarova, Zdenek Peroutka, Jindrich Spinar, Andreas Wilke, Karl-Friedrich Appel, Jens Taggeselle, Andreas Förster, Nicole Toursarkissian, Ekkehard Schmidt, Jochen Bott, Ayham Al-Zoebi, Dirk Hennig, Sabine Fischer, Norbert Schön, Joachim Sauter, Gregor Simonis, Ruth Nischik, Werner Rieker, Isabelle Schenkenberger, Thomas Behnke, Gerhard Klausmann, Michael Jeserich, Dietmar Trenk, Ingo Weigmann, Hannes Reuter, Reinhard Rummel, Candy von Münchhausen, Charlotte von Engelhardt, Eishun Horibe, Taro Shibasaki, Tomohiko Sato, Tsunekazu Kakuta, Ichiro Michishita, Michinao Tan, Ryoji Ishiki, Takahiko Aoyama, Shinichi Higashiue, Yawara Niijima, Akira Idogaki, Toru Hasegawa, Arihiro Kiyosue, Yoshiaki Tomobuchi, Katsunori Kawamitsu, Satsuki Kawasaki, Yoshiki Hata, Kazuki Fukui, Kozaburo Seki, Takashi Takenaka, Mitsuru Abe, Noriaki Utsu, Atsuyuki Oono, Kazuhisa Mitsuo, Atsushi Sueyoshi, Atsushi Hirohata, Mitsuru Tsujimoto, Osamu Ueda, Shinichi Takase, Masahiro Suzuki, Satoru Sakuragi, Fumi Yamamoto, Noritaka Fujimoto, Shigeo Kakinoki, Tatsushi Sugiura, Hiroshi Sugino, Toshihiro Nakamura, Toshiaki Kadokami, Hiroki Uehara, Masahiro Ono, Koichi Yokoya, Akihiro Koike, Sei Komatsu, Masahiro Sonoda, Hideki Ueno, Tomofumi Doi, Yuichiro Takagi, Kazuteru Fujimoto, Yutaka Eki, Munenori Okubo, Kenichiro Sasaki, Martijn van Eck, Eelko Ronner, Salem The, Ruud van de Wal, Pieter Nierop, Cornelis de Nooijer, Henri Werner, Iris Westendorp, Coen van der Zwaan, Hendrikus Crijns, Jan H Cornel, Sipke Strikwerda, Robert Bos, Edwin de Melker, Adrianus Kuijper, Hans Louwerenburg, Jacobus Plomp, Jan-Melle Dantzig, Francisco Prins, Henricus van Kesteren, Frank Willems, Giovanni Amoroso, Gabriela Carnero, Ernesto Duronto, Diego Besada, Carolina Chacon, Pedro Zangroniz, Silvana Solis, Alberto Liberman, Virginia Sernia, Andres Alvarisqueta, Laura Maffei, Oscar G Vilamajo, Celso García, Maximiliano Sicer, Juan Muntaner, Anselmo Bordonava, Juan Albisu, Alejandra Zanini, Lucas Rista, Miguel Hominal, José N Estrada, Aldo Prado, Diego M Gosparini, Beatriz Schiavi, Armando G Castillo, José G Ruíz, Guillermo R Martinez, Víctor G López, Enrique L Rosas, Gabriel R Lopez, Elias G Cantu, Manuel de los Ríos Ibarra, Francisco P Padilla, Jose P Carrasco, Luis V Carrillo, Joel D García, Alfredo N Askar, Carlos A Salinas, Marco A Gamba, Carlos G Sanchez, Arnulfo G Cantú, Raul V Sánchez, Jaime C Madrigal, Rafael H Urbano, Andrés Í Romo, José R González Juanatey, Paolo Racugno, Angel C Fillat, José M de la Torre Hernández, Juan A Peláez, Jorge B Cortada, Pablo G Pavia, Manuel J Navarro, Roberto M Asenjo, Francisco F Díaz, Eduard B Peligero, Fernando A Manterola, Antonio F Ortiz, Juan D Mediavilla García, Francisco M Ortuño, Tomás R Vera, Alfonso S González, Jaime A Viñas, Francisco J Fernández Portales, Petra S Mayordomo, Francisco B Ojeda, Antonio R Domínguez, Rosa S González, Diego B Guerrero, Juan M Ruiz Nodar, Xavier G Marimon, José G Margáez, Roberto M Aguilera, José F Díaz Fernández, José L Zamorano Gómez, Vicente B González, Bruno G del Blanco, Ignacio P Pérez, Mercé R Moreno, Ainhoa R Ereño, José A García Lledó, Juan Prieto, Alex Villablanca, Carlos Raffo, Christian Pincetti, Carlos Conejeros, Oscar Roman, Manuel Rodriguez, Paola Varleta, Cindy Goldberg, Jorge Sandoval, German Arriagada, Lucio Leon, Sergio Potthoff, Jorge Cobos, Christian Figueroa, Ellen Makotoko, Nyda Fourie, Lesley Burgess, Hendrik Nortje, Rust Theron, Perumal Pillai, Naresh Ranjith, Julien Trokis, Soobramoney Pillay, Jeevren Reddy, Theema Nunkoo, Cornelia Kapp, Dorothea Urbach, Lawrence Distiller, Adrian Horak, Louis van Zyl, Kathleen Coetzee, Zelda Punt, Junaid Bayat, Saleem Dawood, Ismail Mitha, Trevenesan Padayachee, Farzana Hoosen, Anthony Dalby, null Prabhavathi, Prakash Gowdaiah, Vimal Mehta, Milan Chag, Milind Gadkari, Kannaiyan Ramamurthee, Asit Das, Jitendra S Sawhney, Suvro Banerjee, Prachee Sathe, Srilakshmi Adhyapak, Tuan Nguyen, Vinh Pham, Huan Do, Anh Nguyen, Hien Nguyen, Binh Truong, Shahnaz Jamil-Copley, Chim Lang, Alastair Pell, Azfar Zaman, Robert Storey, Neil Swanson, Simon Smith, David Sharman, Denise Braganza, Peter Hammond, Andrew Moriarty, Stephen Bain, Maurice Pye, Andrew Sharp, Mark Blagden, Harpal Randeva, Timothy Myhill, Girish Viswanathan, Philip Keeling, Piers Clifford, Manish Saxena, Kristopher Lyons, John McMurray, Feeroz Jaafar, Clare Murphy, Simon Cartwright, Kamal Abouglila, Lubomir Antalik, Peter Krajci, Miroslav Urban, Frantisek Fazekas, Daniel Pella, Daniel Koleny, Tatiana Vykoukalova, Vladimir Macek, Daniela Vinanska, Livia Jamriskova, Slavomir Such, Peter Fulop, Stefan Farsky, Viliam Bugan, Jaroslava Strbova, Karol Micko, Juraj Palka Jr, Vladimir Sivak, Dalby Kristensen, Jens Refsgaard, Lene Holmvang, Ulrik Dixen, Henrik Nielsen, Kenneth Egstrup, Lisette O Jensen, Roman Sykulski, Ole Rasmussen, Alin Andries, Anders Luckow, Gitte Nielsen, Torben Sørensen, Chaiyasith Wongvipaporn, Noppadol Chamnarnphol, Suphot Srimahachota, Nakarin Sansanayudh, Srun Kuanprasert, Damras Tresukosol, Bancha Sookananchai, Mehmet Kanadasi, Turkay Ozcan, Murathan Kucuk, Zeki Ongen, Ertugrul Okuyan, Alev Arat, Sadik Acikel, Ahmet Yalcin, Umit Guray, Ceyhun Ceyhan, Necla Ozer, Sakir Arslan, Oskar Angerås, Nina Johnston, Ann-Charlotte Weiderman, Stellan Bandh, Ole Hansen, Hans Larnefeldt, Dawid Kusiak, Carl-Johan Lindholm, Anders Hedman, David Erlinge, Dan Curiac, Pia Lundman, Roberto Zucconi-Mazzini, Layth Aladellie, Jens Jensen, Jan Verwerft, Mathias Vrolix, Dirk Faes, Harry Striekwold, Peter Sinnaeve, Patrick Timmermans, Antoine Guedes, Marc Delforge, Jan Nimmegeers, Francis Stammen, Ian Buysschaert, Etienne Hoffer, Geert Hollanders, Geert Vervoort, Patrick Coussement, Stefan de Maeseneire, Luc Janssens, Stein A Gravdal, Knut Risberg, Lars Gullestad, Ola D Hofseth, Dennis Nilsen, Knut T Lappegård, Christian van den Heuvel, Charlotte Gibbs, Alamdar Khusrawi, Satish Arora, Tadeusz Tomala, Thorbjørn Kjærnli, Jan Berg-Johansen, Robert Hagemeier, Gunnar Skjelvan, David Colquhoun, John Amerena, Claire Morbey, Christopher Hammett, Anthony Dart, Ronald Lehman, Andrew Hamilton, Matthew Worthley, Peter Purnell, Alan Whelan, Richard MacIsaac, Ktut Arya, Sultan Linjawi, Joseph Proietto, Lakshman Prasad, Aldo Rodriguez, Armando Godoy, Victor Rodriguez, Percy Berrospi, Carlos Chavez, Sandra Negron, Javier Heredia, Felix Medina, Helard Manrique, Walter Cabrera, Fernando Cordova, Trinidad Quinteros, Jaime M Haro, Susana Regalado, Javier Guitton, Hugo Arbanil, Michel Pansieri, Eric Decoulx, Pascal Goube, Axel de Labriolle, Jean N Labeque, Gregoire Range, Yves Cottin, Gilles Montalescot, Guillaume Cayla, Nicolas Danchin, Denis Angoulvant, Emile Ferrario, Meyer Elbaz, Olivier Dubreuil, Philippe G Steg, Caroline Fontaine, Emmanuel Sorbets, Hafiz Omer, Shukri Al-Saif, Hussam Al-Faleh, Abdullah Al-Shehri, Halia Alshehri, Rasha Bazari, Pak Hei, Man Ying, Michael Chan, Michelle Wong, Ronald Ma, Shing C Siu, Chiu C Tsang, Maurizio Ferrario, Emilio Assanelli, Michele Senni, Piermarco Piatti, Paolo Calabrò, Stefano Urbinati, Massimo Michisanti, Ferdinando Varbella, Salvatore de Cosmo, Roberto Trevisan, Sandro Bellotti, Giuseppe Di Pasquale, Angelo S Bongo, Massimo Uguccioni, Edoardo Mannucci, Ciro Mauro, Mauro Ragonese, Claudio Fresco, Maurizio Turturo, Rossella Marcucci, Manuel J Lievano Triana, Camilo Arana, Jose Accini, Rodrigo Botero, Marlena Muzyk-Osikowicz, Fredy T Dada, Gregorio S Vallejo, Fernando Manzur, Daniel Isaza, Dora Molina, Juan G Mesa, Alvaro Quintero, Kai Nyman, Jyrki Mäkelä, Jorma Strand, Sakari Nieminen, Jyrki Taurio, Matti Kuusela, Timo Valle, Mikko Pietilä, Sakari Kekki, Timo Strandberg, Marc Klutstein, Gabriel Greenberg, Yoseph Rozenman, Ehud Chorin, Ariel Roguin, Basil Lewis, Amir Bashkin, Edgar Tan, Jose P Prado, Arthur Ferrolino, Noe Babilonia, Benny Barbas, Generoso Matiga, Raul M Coching, Heinz Drexel, Helmut Brath, Christoph Schnack, Ursula Hanusch, Evelyn Fließer-Görzer, Bernhard Paulweber, Christoph Ebenbichler, Rudolf Prager, Kurt Huber, Michael Wolzt, Johann Auer, Rudolf Berger, Gerit-Holger Schernthaner, Gabriela Stanciulescu, Mihai Creteanu, Marilena Spiridon, Viorica Dobreanu, Dragos Vinereanu, Laura C Iosipescu, Octavian Istratoaie, Ioan Coman, Constantin Militaru, Mircea Cinteza, Peter R Sinnaeve, José C Nicolau, José F Kerr Saraiva, Ramón Corbalán, Petr Widimský, Steen D Kristensen, Juha Hartikainen, Harald Darius, Hung F Tse, Robert G Kiss, Prem Pais, Eli Lev, Leonardo de Luca, Gabriel A Ramos López, Frederic Kontny, Noe A Babilonia, Dmitry A Zateyshchikov, Mikhail Ruda, Omer Elamin, František Kovář, Anthony J Dalby, Héctor Bueno, Chern-En Chiang, Alexander Parkhomenko, Tuan Q Nguyen, Maria Leonsson-Zachrisson, Herrada, Anthony, Brigham & Women’s Hospital [Boston] (BWH), Harvard Medical School [Boston] (HMS), AP-HP - Hôpital Bichat - Claude Bernard [Paris], Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP), Laboratoire de Recherche Vasculaire Translationnelle (LVTS (UMR_S_1148 / U1148)), Université Paris 13 (UP13)-Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Royal Brompton Hospital, McMaster University [Hamilton, Ontario], Keenan Research Centre of the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute [Toronto], St. Michael's Hospital, University of Toronto, Service de Pharmacologie médicale = service de pharmacologie - Dosage de médicaments [CHU Saint-Antoine], CHU Saint-Antoine [AP-HP], Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Sorbonne Université (SU), Sorbonne Université (SU), National Heart and Lung Institute [London] (NHLI), Imperial College London-Royal Brompton and Harefield NHS Foundation Trust, Uppsala University Hospital, Uppsala Universitet [Uppsala], AstraZeneca, Tokai University, Uppsala University, Imperial College London, Saint Luke's Mid America Heart Institute, University of Missouri [Kansas City] (UMKC), University of Missouri System, University of New South Wales [Sydney] (UNSW), University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center [Dallas], Stanford University, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Nîmes (CHU Nîmes), Université de Montpellier (UM), Bhatt, D, Steg, P, Mehta, S, Leiter, L, Simon, T, Fox, K, Held, C, Andersson, M, Himmelmann, A, Ridderstrale, W, Chen, J, Song, Y, Diaz, R, Goto, S, James, S, Ray, K, Parkhomenko, A, Kosiborod, M, Mcguire, D, Harrington, R, Santos, V, Jain, A, Lendel, I, Russo, M, Haught, W, Bouza, M, Gogia, H, Banerjee, S, Kichura, G, Kantaros, L, Padron, F, Passi, R, Stone, J, Pursley, M, D'Urso, M, Gardner, T, Bennett, J, Nour, K, Saini, S, Zhang, W, Kumbhani, D, Thomas, D, Angiolillo, D, Bertolet, B, Roman-Miranda, A, Black, R, Manshadi, R, Vaca, C, Blanco, A, Napoli, M, Brabham, D, Akyea-Djamson, A, Desai, P, Prasada, S, Khaira, A, Forgosh, L, Lieber, I, Umpierrez, G, Singal, D, Londono, J, Fraser, N, Ruiz, J, Vega, D, Rodriguez, L, Brown, C, Syed, F, Aggarwala, G, Eaves, W, Foster, M, Gupta, D, Avino, D, Asfour, W, Tonnessen, G, Zhao, X, Singh, N, Brockmyre, A, Lepor, N, Shammas, N, Blick, D, Hearne, S, Prodafikas, J, Carell, E, Izzo, M, Karim, A, Zakhary, B, Atieh, M, Leichter, S, Meadows, C, Hotchkiss, D, Abu-Fadel, M, Wiseman, A, Bander, J, Shah, M, Ganim, R, Sopko, K, Khan, M, Lloret, R, Weirick, T, Mehta, R, Thadani, U, Bhargava, A, Moya, J, Staniloae, C, Guerra, Y, Chhabra, A, Kosmicki, D, Shaheen, W, Mohammed, A, Bitters, J, Pattanayak, J, Javier, J, Srivastava, S, Phillips, R, Al-Amin, J, Lillestol, M, Simpson, P, Hazan, L, Amin, A, Shah, G, Korpas, D, Platt, B, Dickert, J, Puente, O, Hiotis, L, Doyle, T, Rajan, R, Meholick, A, Gring, C, Hage-Korban, E, Feldman, R, Colfer, H, Butman, S, Hart, T, Huling, R, Eshaghian, S, Quintana, O, Cheung, D, Handel, F, Rodriguez, M, Suh, D, Gordon, P, Pressman, G, Bauer, M, French, W, Barettella, M, Chatrathi, S, Suresh, D, Goldberg, R, Huth, M, Younis, L, Rahman, A, Mascolo, R, Welch, M, Suneja, R, Smith, S, Shurmur, S, Agaiby, J, Jingo, A, Johnston, J, Beth, M, Vlastaris, A, Kemp, S, Taheri, H, Pereira, E, Deyoung, M, Hawa, Z, Smith, R, Galski, T, Garas, S, Reddy, M, Sharma, S, Hargrove, J, Treasure, C, Emerson, R, Haddad, T, Rohr, K, Levinson, L, Gaona, R, Uretsky, B, Maheshwari, H, Lee, D, Kinnaman, S, Singal, R, Geohas, J, Gigliotti, O, Raisinghani, A, Khurana, C, Hella, B, Kelberman, M, Voyce, S, Singh, S, Lo, E, Singh, P, Goodfellow, R, Fischer, S, Lorraine, R, Turner, T, Shanes, J, Busch, R, Broker, R, Zaniewski, M, Pounds, K, Debs-Perez, G, Ong, S, Frandsen, B, Fullington, D, Jaffrani, N, Khan, A, Lee, M, Pouzar, J, Revtyak, G, Gonzalez, J, Nakhle, S, Murillo, A, Young, D, Makam, S, Syed, M, Woolf, K, Grena, P, Alfata, S, Mahal, S, Hoffman, D, Kizhakekuttu, T, Deering, J, Bhavsar, J, Mikesell, S, Wilson, W, Wilson, V, El, S, Spinale, F, Kannarkat, V, Rao, S, Hanson, L, Bertsch, J, Gonzalez-Ortiz, E, Severino, N, Willis, J, Schock, J, Bakhtari, L, Gazmuri, R, Ansari, S, Hall, J, Mehta, A, Shealy, N, Zarich, S, Singh, D, Vora, K, Andrawis, N, Molter, D, Maron, D, Cardona, J, D'Agostino, R, Arshad, T, Samaan, R, Jones, D, Presser, D, Heath, J, Green, S, Bittar, G, Henry, S, Korn, D, Schmedtje, J, Nadar, V, Graham, B, Labroo, A, Clavijo, L, Roseman, H, Ledesma, G, Rosen, R, Dor, I, Kirby, W, Sutton, J, Eder, F, Iteld, B, Gomez-Cortes, J, Buchbinder, M, Kasper, J, Terrelonge, A, Torres, G, Jagielo, T, Alvarez, J, Handelsman, Y, Guillen, M, Richwine, R, Lewy-Alterbaum, L, Corder, C, Arvind, M, Bolshoun, D, Mikhail, M, Minton, S, Alvarado, O, Abbott, J, Cauthen, B, Welter, R, Mintz, R, Cox, J, Quick, A, Weiss, M, Dy, J, Zebrack, J, Gandelman, G, Hegde, V, Silver, M, Degregorio, M, Lawson, W, Paa, C, Bortnick, A, Krolick, M, Sotolongo, R, Cheirif, J, Kumar, P, Jetty, P, Patel, A, Kruk, M, Kobielusz-Gembala, I, Rewerska, B, Madrzejewski, A, Milewski, K, Cygler, J, Petryka-Mazurkiewicz, J, Jastrzebski, W, Korecki, J, Fil, W, Prokopczuk, J, Bochenek, A, Wujkowski, M, Witek, R, Konczakowski, P, Miekus, P, Szczasny, M, Musial, W, Cymerman, K, Lampart, J, Mikosinski, J, Szynal, S, Fares, I, Opolski, G, Mazur, S, Wozakowska-Kaplon, B, Bijata-Bronisz, R, Wierucki, L, Losa, B, Drelich, G, Konieczny, M, Starczewski, P, Pawlowicz, L, Jesionowski, P, Jurowiecki, J, Gniot, J, Czyzycki, M, Stania, K, Kucharczyk-Bauman, I, Busz-Papiez, B, Karczmarczyk, A, Sudnik, W, Koszek, A, Kolodziej, P, Skwarna, B, Jaramillo, N, Jankowski, M, Czochra, W, Kinasz, L, Miklaszewicz, B, Stasinska, T, Pluta, W, Basiak, M, Rusicka, T, Niedbal-Yahfouf, I, Popenda, G, Korzeniak, R, Mirek, A, Mariankowski, R, Wojnowski, L, Korol, M, Baszak, J, Podolec, P, Piesiewicz, W, Zurakowski, A, Luengas, C, Skura, M, Pilecki, P, Majchrzak, P, Krzyzagorska, E, Drozd, M, Kaczmarek, B, Sliwinska, T, Zelazowska, K, Sztembis, R, Landa, K, Matyszczak-Toniak, L, Strojek, K, Piepiorka, M, Malinowski, R, Gorska, M, Stolarczyk-Sowa, E, Romanowski, L, Zinka, E, Reszka, Z, Skierkowska, J, Uzunow, A, Laskowska-Derlaga, E, Puntus, E, Kosmacheva, E, Koziolova, N, Pavlov, P, Supryadkina, T, Didenko, Y, Kopylov, P, Kazakov, A, Aksentiev, S, Vishneva, E, Repin, A, Smolenskaya, O, Mantserova, O, Khrustalev, O, Privalova, E, Konstantinov, V, Boldueva, S, Ezhov, A, Chernyavsky, A, Kamalov, G, Galyavich, A, Zubeeva, G, Nechaeva, G, Shustov, S, Dzhaiani, N, Treshkur, T, Osokina, N, Panov, A, Shutemova, E, Makukhin, V, Kropotina, T, Tsyba, L, Karpov, Y, Sizova, J, Ballyuzek, M, Tarasov, N, Demchenko, E, Barbarash, O, Moiseev, V, Markov, V, Kuznetsov, V, Viktorova, I, Sergienko, I, Ermoshkina, L, Khasanov, N, Khlevchuk, T, Baglikov, A, Shalaev, S, Zonova, E, Reznik, E, Haisheva, L, Morugova, T, Lomakin, N, Vishnevsky, A, Shvarts, Y, Magnitskaya, O, Mikhailusova, M, Pavlysh, E, Libov, I, Zateyschikova, A, Kostenko, V, Edin, A, Khovaeva, Y, Zakharov, K, Stryuk, R, Khirmanov, V, Kanorskiy, S, Yakushin, S, Barabashkina, A, Li, H, Zhao, Q, Zhang, J, Ma, J, He, Y, Luo, M, Zhang, A, Zhang, N, Chai, Y, Ma, G, Wang, H, Liu, Z, He, L, Song, Z, Dong, X, Tao, L, Li, Z, Su, X, Kong, X, Niu, H, Ge, J, Luo, Z, Huang, W, Peng, D, Yuan, Z, Milanova, M, Tenev, D, Gogov, A, Karageorgiev, D, Kolchev, T, Rusev, N, Georgieva, N, Kondov, R, Rusinov, V, Petrov, I, Stanchev, G, Konteva, M, Dincheva, A, Yaneva, Z, Vatova, R, Ilieva, K, Runev, N, Kolomanov, B, Iliev, N, Tisheva, S, Chompalova, B, Tokmakova, M, Raev, D, Byanov, K, Markov, D, Mihov, L, Mihov, A, Milcheva, N, Minchev, M, Mollov, M, Borisov, B, Tihchev, T, Karakolev, V, Dimov, B, Georgiev, S, Smilov, L, Koo, B, Ahn, T, Hong, S, Yoon, J, Oh, S, Jeong, M, Kim, D, Chang, K, Kim, W, Hahn, J, Cha, K, Lee, J, Choi, S, Nam, C, Chae, I, Park, Y, Tahk, S, Shin, W, Chae, J, Kim, B, Bae, J, Park, W, Rha, S, Choi, Y, Hwang, J, Park, H, Baracioli, L, Guimaraes, F, Vasconcellos, E, Saraiva, J, Pereira, A, Santos, Q, Rossi, P, Maia, L, Madeira, M, Pereira, M, Botelho, R, Reis, G, Eliaschewitz, F, Borges, J, Nascimento, C, Fortes, J, de Souza, W, Pimentel, P, Hissa, M, Franchetti, M, Precoma, D, Ortiz, C, Hernandes, M, Saporito, W, dos Santos, F, Kormann, A, Neuenschwander, F, Dutra, O, Rassi, N, Tanajura, L, Souza, J, Junior, D, Leaes, P, Forte, A, Bonansea, T, Marin, J, Machado, B, Cerqueira, M, Silva, F, Michalaros, Y, Manenti, E, Cercato, C, Figueiredo, E, Liu, M, Wang, Y, Lee, T, Fang, C, Wu, Y, Ueng, K, Sheu, H, Lai, W, Hsieh, I, Chen, Z, Chiang, C, Shyu, K, Hsia, C, Mar, G, Chan, S, Wu, C, Tseng, W, Yeh, H, Wang, J, Hou, C, Sorokina, I, Dolzhenko, M, Horoshko, O, Karpenko, O, Rudenko, L, Vakaliuk, I, Kulyk, A, Levchenko, O, Prokhorov, O, Reshotko, D, Sorokivskyy, M, Velichko, N, Maslovskyi, V, Teliatnikova, Z, Dotsenko, S, Krakhmalova, O, Kraiz, I, Zharinova, V, Bula, L, Kaydashev, I, Molodtsov, V, Rasputina, L, Pidlisna, V, Lysunets, O, Kravchenko, A, Glushko, L, Khomazyuk, T, Svyshchenko, Y, Parkhomenko, O, Mankovsky, B, Abrahamovych, O, Yagensky, A, Stanislavchuk, M, Vasilyeva, L, Sokolova, L, Sychov, O, Tseluyko, V, Kyrychenko, I, Rishko, M, Furkalo, S, Gallo, R, Bertrand, O, Constance, C, Sussex, B, Zadra, R, Kouz, S, Chehayeb, R, Pandey, A, Dion, D, Bailey, G, Hill, L, Ramanathan, K, Dorsch, M, Nanji, A, Babapulle, M, Montigny, M, Gosselin, G, Dehghani, P, Rupka, D, Le May, M, Pichette, F, St-Maurice, F, Teefy, P, Mansour, S, Kassam, S, Cheung, S, Siega, A, O'Keefe, D, Sabbah, E, Bell, A, Chouinard, G, Wong, B, Miller, M, Gaudet, D, Lachance, P, Bata, I, Petrella, R, Gossard, D, Dumas, R, Ing, D, Boyrazian, H, Bessoudo, R, Huynh, T, Hart, R, Belle-Isle, J, Shukla, D, Kelly, A, Mazza, G, Cha, J, Henein, S, Frechette, A, Vizel, S, Liutkus, J, O'Mahony, M, Halperin, F, Kooy, J, Graham, J, Bailey, A, Wojcik, R, Wilderman, I, Turi, T, Motyovszki, A, Merkely, B, Kiss, R, Kiraly, C, Andrassy, P, Sarszegi, Z, Fulop, T, Zilahi, Z, Edes, I, Papp, A, Muller, G, Czigany, A, Zolyomi, S, Koranyi, L, Takacs, J, Juhasz, F, Benczur, B, Kancz, S, Foldi, A, Nagy, A, Bakai, J, Greschik, I, Puski, L, Nagy, L, Kirschner, R, Kuchar, R, Hajek, P, Busak, L, Michalik, D, Matyasek, I, Marusincova, I, Kucera, D, Jerabek, O, Honkova, M, Dedek, V, Rihacek, I, Kos, P, Slaby, J, Machkova, M, Zidkova, E, Elbl, L, Grunfeldova, H, Carda, J, Mrozek, V, Maly, J, Milkovic, R, Malecha, J, Skalicka, H, Oral, I, Krcova, E, Lisa, L, Belohlavek, J, Miklik, R, Cermak, O, Bednarova, J, Peroutka, Z, Spinar, J, Wilke, A, Appel, K, Taggeselle, J, Forster, A, Toursarkissian, N, Schmidt, E, Bott, J, Al-Zoebi, A, Hennig, D, Schon, N, Sauter, J, Simonis, G, Nischik, R, Rieker, W, Schenkenberger, I, Behnke, T, Klausmann, G, Jeserich, M, Trenk, D, Weigmann, I, Reuter, H, Rummel, R, von Munchhausen, C, von Engelhardt, C, Horibe, E, Shibasaki, T, Sato, T, Kakuta, T, Michishita, I, Tan, M, Ishiki, R, Aoyama, T, Higashiue, S, Niijima, Y, Idogaki, A, Hasegawa, T, Kiyosue, A, Tomobuchi, Y, Kawamitsu, K, Kawasaki, S, Hata, Y, Fukui, K, Seki, K, Takenaka, T, Abe, M, Utsu, N, Oono, A, Mitsuo, K, Sueyoshi, A, Hirohata, A, Tsujimoto, M, Ueda, O, Takase, S, Suzuki, M, Sakuragi, S, Yamamoto, F, Fujimoto, N, Kakinoki, S, Sugiura, T, Sugino, H, Nakamura, T, Kadokami, T, Uehara, H, Ono, M, Yokoya, K, Koike, A, Komatsu, S, Sonoda, M, Ueno, H, Doi, T, Takagi, Y, Fujimoto, K, Eki, Y, Okubo, M, Sasaki, K, van Eck, M, Ronner, E, The, S, van de Wal, R, Nierop, P, de Nooijer, C, Werner, H, Westendorp, I, van der Zwaan, C, Crijns, H, Cornel, J, Strikwerda, S, Bos, R, de Melker, E, Kuijper, A, Louwerenburg, H, Plomp, J, Dantzig, J, Prins, F, van Kesteren, H, Willems, F, Amoroso, G, Carnero, G, Duronto, E, Besada, D, Chacon, C, Zangroniz, P, Solis, S, Liberman, A, Sernia, V, Alvarisqueta, A, Maffei, L, Vilamajo, O, Garcia, C, Sicer, M, Muntaner, J, Bordonava, A, Albisu, J, Zanini, A, Rista, L, Hominal, M, Estrada, J, Prado, A, Gosparini, D, Schiavi, B, Castillo, A, Martinez, G, Lopez, V, Rosas, E, Lopez, G, Cantu, E, de los Rios Ibarra, M, Padilla, F, Carrasco, J, Carrillo, L, Garcia, J, Askar, A, Salinas, C, Gamba, M, Sanchez, C, Cantu, A, Sanchez, R, Madrigal, J, Urbano, R, Romo, A, Gonzalez Juanatey, J, Racugno, P, Fillat, A, de la Torre Hernandez, J, Pelaez, J, Cortada, J, Pavia, P, Navarro, M, Asenjo, R, Diaz, F, Peligero, E, Manterola, F, Ortiz, A, Mediavilla Garcia, J, Ortuno, F, Vera, T, Gonzalez, A, Vinas, J, Fernandez Portales, F, Mayordomo, P, Ojeda, F, Dominguez, A, Gonzalez, R, Guerrero, D, Ruiz Nodar, J, Marimon, X, Margaez, J, Aguilera, R, Diaz Fernandez, J, Zamorano Gomez, J, Gonzalez, V, del Blanco, B, Perez, I, Moreno, M, Ereno, A, Garcia Lledo, J, Prieto, J, Villablanca, A, Raffo, C, Pincetti, C, Conejeros, C, Roman, O, Varleta, P, Goldberg, C, Sandoval, J, Arriagada, G, Corbalan, R, Leon, L, Potthoff, S, Cobos, J, Figueroa, C, Makotoko, E, Fourie, N, Burgess, L, Nortje, H, Theron, R, Pillai, P, Ranjith, N, Trokis, J, Pillay, S, Reddy, J, Nunkoo, T, Kapp, C, Urbach, D, Distiller, L, Horak, A, van Zyl, L, Coetzee, K, Punt, Z, Bayat, J, Dawood, S, Mitha, I, Padayachee, T, Hoosen, F, Dalby, A, Prabhavathi, Gowdaiah, P, Mehta, V, Chag, M, Gadkari, M, Ramamurthee, K, Das, A, Sawhney, J, Sathe, P, Adhyapak, S, Nguyen, T, Pham, V, Do, H, Nguyen, A, Nguyen, H, Truong, B, Jamil-Copley, S, Lang, C, Pell, A, Zaman, A, Storey, R, Swanson, N, Sharman, D, Braganza, D, Hammond, P, Moriarty, A, Bain, S, Pye, M, Sharp, A, Blagden, M, Randeva, H, Myhill, T, Viswanathan, G, Keeling, P, Clifford, P, Saxena, M, Lyons, K, Mcmurray, J, Jaafar, F, Murphy, C, Cartwright, S, Abouglila, K, Antalik, L, Krajci, P, Urban, M, Fazekas, F, Pella, D, Koleny, D, Vykoukalova, T, Macek, V, Vinanska, D, Jamriskova, L, Such, S, Fulop, P, Farsky, S, Bugan, V, Strbova, J, Micko, K, Palka Jr, J, Sivak, V, Kristensen, D, Refsgaard, J, Holmvang, L, Dixen, U, Nielsen, H, Egstrup, K, Jensen, L, Sykulski, R, Rasmussen, O, Andries, A, Luckow, A, Nielsen, G, Sorensen, T, Wongvipaporn, C, Chamnarnphol, N, Srimahachota, S, Sansanayudh, N, Kuanprasert, S, Tresukosol, D, Sookananchai, B, Kanadasi, M, Ozcan, T, Kucuk, M, Ongen, Z, Okuyan, E, Arat, A, Acikel, S, Yalcin, A, Guray, U, Ceyhan, C, Ozer, N, Arslan, S, Angeras, O, Johnston, N, Weiderman, A, Bandh, S, Hansen, O, Larnefeldt, H, Kusiak, D, Lindholm, C, Hedman, A, Erlinge, D, Curiac, D, Lundman, P, Zucconi-Mazzini, R, Aladellie, L, Jensen, J, Verwerft, J, Vrolix, M, Faes, D, Striekwold, H, Sinnaeve, P, Timmermans, P, Guedes, A, Delforge, M, Nimmegeers, J, Stammen, F, Buysschaert, I, Hoffer, E, Hollanders, G, Vervoort, G, Coussement, P, de Maeseneire, S, Janssens, L, Gravdal, S, Risberg, K, Gullestad, L, Hofseth, O, Nilsen, D, Lappegard, K, van den Heuvel, C, Gibbs, C, Khusrawi, A, Arora, S, Tomala, T, Kjaernli, T, Berg-Johansen, J, Hagemeier, R, Skjelvan, G, Colquhoun, D, Amerena, J, Morbey, C, Hammett, C, Dart, A, Lehman, R, Hamilton, A, Worthley, M, Purnell, P, Whelan, A, Macisaac, R, Arya, K, Linjawi, S, Proietto, J, Prasad, L, Rodriguez, A, Godoy, A, Rodriguez, V, Berrospi, P, Chavez, C, Negron, S, Heredia, J, Medina, F, Manrique, H, Cabrera, W, Cordova, F, Quinteros, T, Haro, J, Regalado, S, Guitton, J, Arbanil, H, Pansieri, M, Decoulx, E, Goube, P, de Labriolle, A, Labeque, J, Range, G, Cottin, Y, Montalescot, G, Cayla, G, Danchin, N, Angoulvant, D, Ferrario, E, Elbaz, M, Dubreuil, O, Fontaine, C, Sorbets, E, Omer, H, Al-Saif, S, Al-Faleh, H, Al-Shehri, A, El-Amin, O, Alshehri, H, Bazari, R, Hei, P, Ying, M, Chan, M, Wong, M, Ma, R, Siu, S, Tsang, C, Ferrario, M, Assanelli, E, Senni, M, Piatti, P, Calabro, P, Urbinati, S, Michisanti, M, Varbella, F, de Cosmo, S, Trevisan, R, Bellotti, S, Di Pasquale, G, Bongo, A, Uguccioni, M, Mannucci, E, Mauro, C, Ragonese, M, Fresco, C, Turturo, M, Marcucci, R, Lievano Triana, M, Arana, C, Accini, J, Botero, R, Muzyk-Osikowicz, M, Dada, F, Vallejo, G, Manzur, F, Isaza, D, Molina, D, Mesa, J, Quintero, A, Nyman, K, Makela, J, Strand, J, Nieminen, S, Taurio, J, Kuusela, M, Valle, T, Pietila, M, Kekki, S, Strandberg, T, Klutstein, M, Greenberg, G, Rozenman, Y, Chorin, E, Roguin, A, Lewis, B, Bashkin, A, Tan, E, Prado, J, Ferrolino, A, Babilonia, N, Barbas, B, Matiga, G, Coching, R, Drexel, H, Brath, H, Schnack, C, Hanusch, U, Fliesser-Gorzer, E, Paulweber, B, Ebenbichler, C, Prager, R, Huber, K, Wolzt, M, Auer, J, Berger, R, Schernthaner, G, Stanciulescu, G, Creteanu, M, Spiridon, M, Dobreanu, V, Vinereanu, D, Iosipescu, L, Istratoaie, O, Coman, I, Militaru, C, Cinteza, M, Nicolau, J, Kerr Saraiva, J, Widimsky, P, Kristensen, S, Hartikainen, J, Darius, H, Tse, H, Pais, P, Lev, E, de Luca, L, Ramos Lopez, G, Kontny, F, Zateyshchikov, D, Ruda, M, Elamin, O, Kovar, F, Bueno, H, Leonsson-Zachrisson, M, Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)-Université Paris 13 (UP13)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Service de pharmacologie - Dosage de médicaments [CHU Saint-Antoine], Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-CHU Saint-Antoine [AP-HP], Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Sorbonne Université (SU), and Royal Brompton and Harefield NHS Foundation Trust-Imperial College London
- Subjects
Male ,Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors/therapeutic use ,THEMIS Steering Committee and Investigators ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Vascular damage Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 16] ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Coronary Angiography ,Stroke/epidemiology ,Coronary artery disease ,DOUBLE-BLIND ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hemorrhage/chemically induced ,acetylsalicylic acid, antidiabetic agent, placebo, ticagrelor ,Secondary Prevention ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Myocardial infarction ,Coronary Artery Bypass ,Cardiovascular Diseases/mortality ,11 Medical and Health Sciences ,OUTCOMES ,Aspirin ,[SDV.MHEP] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Clopidogrel ,3. Good health ,Ticagrelor/therapeutic use ,DRUG-ELUTING STENTS ,CLOPIDOGREL ,Cardiology ,PLATELET INHIBITION ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,Ticagrelor ,TIMI ,medicine.drug ,Coronary Artery Disease/complications ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hypoglycemic Agents/therapeutic use ,POOLED ANALYSIS ,03 medical and health sciences ,Medicine, General & Internal ,Percutaneous Coronary Intervention ,Double-Blind Method ,General & Internal Medicine ,Internal medicine ,Myocardial Infarction/epidemiology ,Humans ,Aged ,Science & Technology ,ANTIPLATELET THERAPY ,business.industry ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/complications ,ELEVATION MYOCARDIAL-INFARCTION ,RIVAROXABAN ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,medicine.disease ,ASPIRIN ,Coronary Stenosis/diagnostic imaging ,Aspirin/therapeutic use ,Conventional PCI ,business ,[SDV.MHEP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology - Abstract
Contains fulltext : 215333.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access) BACKGROUND: Patients with stable coronary artery disease and diabetes with previous percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), particularly those with previous stenting, are at high risk of ischaemic events. These patients are generally treated with aspirin. In this trial, we aimed to investigate if these patients would benefit from treatment with aspirin plus ticagrelor. METHODS: The Effect of Ticagrelor on Health Outcomes in diabEtes Mellitus patients Intervention Study (THEMIS) was a phase 3 randomised, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial, done in 1315 sites in 42 countries. Patients were eligible if 50 years or older, with type 2 diabetes, receiving anti-hyperglycaemic drugs for at least 6 months, with stable coronary artery disease, and one of three other mutually non-exclusive criteria: a history of previous PCI or of coronary artery bypass grafting, or documentation of angiographic stenosis of 50% or more in at least one coronary artery. Eligible patients were randomly assigned (1:1) to either ticagrelor or placebo, by use of an interactive voice-response or web-response system. The THEMIS-PCI trial comprised a prespecified subgroup of patients with previous PCI. The primary efficacy outcome was a composite of cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, or stroke (measured in the intention-to-treat population). FINDINGS: Between Feb 17, 2014, and May 24, 2016, 11 154 patients (58% of the overall THEMIS trial) with a history of previous PCI were enrolled in the THEMIS-PCI trial. Median follow-up was 3.3 years (IQR 2.8-3.8). In the previous PCI group, fewer patients receiving ticagrelor had a primary efficacy outcome event than in the placebo group (404 [7.3%] of 5558 vs 480 [8.6%] of 5596; HR 0.85 [95% CI 0.74-0.97], p=0.013). The same effect was not observed in patients without PCI (p=0.76, pinteraction=0.16). The proportion of patients with cardiovascular death was similar in both treatment groups (174 [3.1%] with ticagrelor vs 183 (3.3%) with placebo; HR 0.96 [95% CI 0.78-1.18], p=0.68), as well as all-cause death (282 [5.1%] vs 323 [5.8%]; 0.88 [0.75-1.03], p=0.11). TIMI major bleeding occurred in 111 (2.0%) of 5536 patients receiving ticagrelor and 62 (1.1%) of 5564 patients receiving placebo (HR 2.03 [95% CI 1.48-2.76], p
- Published
- 2019
14. Prognostic value of cardiac magnetic resonance early after ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction in older patients.
- Author
-
Gabaldón-Pérez A, Marcos-Garcés V, Gavara J, López-Lereu MP, Monmeneu JV, Pérez N, Ríos-Navarro C, de Dios E, Merenciano-González H, Cànoves J, Racugno P, Bonanad C, Minana G, Núnez J, Moratal D, Chorro FJ, Valente F, Lorenzatti D, Ortiz-Pérez JT, Rodríguez-Palomares JF, and Bodí V
- Subjects
- Humans, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Stroke Volume, Prognosis, Ventricular Function, Left, Predictive Value of Tests, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction diagnostic imaging, ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction therapy, ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction etiology, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: older patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) represent a very high-risk population. Data on the prognostic value of cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) in this scenario are scarce., Methods: the registry comprised 247 STEMI patients over 70 years of age treated with percutaneous intervention and included in a multicenter registry. Baseline characteristics, echocardiographic parameters and CMR-derived left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF, %), infarct size (% of left ventricular mass) and microvascular obstruction (MVO, number of segments) were prospectively collected. The additional prognostic power of CMR was assessed using adjusted C-statistic, net reclassification index (NRI) and integrated discrimination improvement index (IDI)., Results: during a 4.8-year mean follow-up, the number of first major adverse cardiac events (MACE) was 66 (26.7%): 27 all-cause deaths and 39 re-admissions for acute heart failure. Predictors of MACE were GRACE score (HR 1.03 [1.02-1.04], P < 0.001), CMR-LVEF (HR 0.97 [0.95-0.99] per percent increase, P = 0.006) and MVO (HR 1.24 [1.09-1.4] per segment, P = 0.001). Adding CMR data significantly improved MACE prediction compared to the model with baseline and echocardiographic characteristics (C-statistic 0.759 [0.694-0.824] vs. 0.685 [0.613-0.756], NRI = 0.6, IDI = 0.08, P < 0.001). The best cut-offs for independent variables were GRACE score > 155, LVEF < 40% and MVO ≥ 2 segments. A simple score (0, 1, 2, 3) based on the number of altered factors accurately predicted the MACE per 100 person-years: 0.78, 5.53, 11.51 and 78.79, respectively (P < 0.001)., Conclusions: CMR data contribute valuable prognostic information in older patients submitted to undergo CMR soon after STEMI. The Older-STEMI-CMR score should be externally validated., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Magnetic Resonance Assessment of Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction at Any Time Post-Infarction for Prediction of Subsequent Events in a Large Multicenter STEMI Registry.
- Author
-
Gavara J, Marcos-Garces V, Lopez-Lereu MP, Monmeneu JV, Rios-Navarro C, de Dios E, Perez N, Merenciano H, Gabaldon A, Cànoves J, Racugno P, Bonanad C, Minana G, Nunez J, Nunez E, Moratal D, Chorro FJ, Valente F, Lorenzatti D, Rodríguez-Palomares JF, Ortiz-Pérez JT, and Bodi V
- Subjects
- Contrast Media, Gadolinium, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine methods, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Predictive Value of Tests, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Registries, Stroke Volume, Ventricular Function, Left, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention adverse effects, ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction diagnostic imaging, ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction etiology
- Abstract
Background: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the most accurate imaging technique for left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) quantification, but as yet the prognostic value of LVEF assessment at any time after ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) for subsequent major adverse cardiac event (MACE) prediction is uncertain., Purpose: To explore the prognostic impact of MRI-derived LVEF at any time post-STEMI to predict subsequent MACE (cardiovascular death or re-admission for acute heart failure)., Study Type: Prospective., Population: One thousand thirteen STEMI patients were included in a multicenter registry., Field Strength/sequence: 1.5-T. Balanced steady-state free precession (cine imaging) and segmented inversion recovery steady-state free precession (late gadolinium enhancement) sequences., Assessment: Post-infarction MRI-derived LVEF (reduced [r]: <40%; mid-range [mr]: 40%-49%; preserved [p]: ≥50%) was sequentially quantified at 1 week and after >3 months of follow-up., Statistical Tests: Multi-state Markov model to determine the prognostic value of each LVEF state (r-, mr- or p-) at any time point assessed to predict subsequent MACE. A P-value <0.05 was considered to be statistically significant., Results: During a 6.2-year median follow-up, 105 MACE (10%) were registered. Transitions toward improved LVEF predominated and only r-LVEF (at any time assessed) was significantly related to a higher incidence of subsequent MACE. The observed transitions from r-LVEF, mr-LVEF, and p-LVEF states to MACE were: 15.3%, 6%, and 6.7%, respectively. Regarding the adjusted transition intensity ratios, patients in r-LVEF state were 4.52-fold more likely than those in mr-LVEF state and 5.01-fold more likely than those in p-LVEF state to move to MACE state. Nevertheless, no significant differences were found in transitions from mr-LVEF and p-LVEF states to MACE state (P-value = 0.6)., Data Conclusion: LVEF is an important MRI index for simple and dynamic post-STEMI risk stratification. Detection of r-LVEF by MRI at any time during follow-up identifies a subset of patients at high risk of subsequent events., Level of Evidence: 2 TECHNICAL EFFICACY STAGE: 2., (© 2021 The Authors. Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging published by Wiley Periodicals LLC. on behalf of International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Risk score for early risk prediction by cardiac magnetic resonance after acute myocardial infarction.
- Author
-
Marcos-Garcés V, Perez N, Gavara J, Lopez-Lereu MP, Monmeneu JV, Rios-Navarro C, de Dios E, Merenciano-González H, Gabaldon-Pérez A, Cànoves J, Racugno P, Bonanad C, Minana G, Nunez J, Moratal D, Chorro FJ, Valente F, Lorenzatti D, Ortiz-Pérez JT, Rodríguez-Palomares JF, and Bodi V
- Subjects
- Aged, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Male, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Risk Factors, Stroke Volume, Ventricular Function, Left, Myocardial Infarction diagnostic imaging, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention, ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Background: Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) performed early after ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) can improve major adverse cardiac event (MACE) risk prediction. We aimed to create a simple clinical-CMR risk score for early MACE risk stratification in STEMI patients., Methods: We performed a multicenter prospective registry of reperfused STEMI patients (n = 1118) in whom early (1-week) CMR-derived left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), infarct size and microvascular obstruction (MVO) were quantified. MACE was defined as a combined clinical endpoint of cardiovascular (CV) death, non-fatal myocardial infarction (NF-MI) or re-admission for acute decompensated heart failure (HF)., Results: During a median follow-up of 5.52 [2.63-7.44] years, 216 first MACE (58 CV deaths, 71 NF-MI and 87 HF) were registered. Mean age was 59.3 ± 12.3 years and most patients (82.8%) were male. Based on the four variables independently associated with MACE, we computed an 8-point risk score: time to reperfusion >4.15 h (1 point), GRACE risk score > 155 (3 points), CMR-LVEF <40% (3 points), and MVO >1.5 segments (1 point). This score permitted MACE risk stratification: MACE per 100 person-years was 1.96 in the low-risk category (0-2 points), 5.44 in the intermediate-risk category (3-5 points), and 19.7 in the high-risk category (6-8 points): p < 0.001 in multivariable Cox survival analysis., Conclusions: A novel risk score including clinical (time to reperfusion >4.15 h and GRACE risk score > 155) and CMR (LVEF <40% and MVO >1.5 segments) variables allows for simple and straightforward MACE risk stratification early after STEMI. External validation should confirm the applicability of the risk score., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Exercise ECG Testing and Stress Cardiac Magnetic Resonance for Risk Prediction in Patients With Chronic Coronary Syndrome.
- Author
-
Marcos-Garces V, Merenciano-Gonzalez H, Gabaldon-Perez A, Nuñez-Marin G, Lorenzo-Hernandez M, Gavara J, Perez N, Rios-Navarro C, De Dios E, Bonanad C, Racugno P, Lopez-Lereu MP, Monmeneu JV, Chorro FJ, and Bodi V
- Subjects
- Humans, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Predictive Value of Tests, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Coronary Artery Disease, Electrocardiography
- Abstract
Purpose: Vasodilator stress cardiac magnetic resonance (VS-CMR) has become crucial in the workup of patients with known or suspected chronic coronary syndrome (CCS). Whether traditional exercise ECG testing (ExECG) contributes prognostic information beyond VS-CMR is unclear., Methods: We retrospectively included 288 patients with known or suspected CCS who had undergone ExECG and subsequent VS-CMR in our institution. Clinical, ExECG, and VS-CMR variables were recorded. We defined the serious adverse events (SAE) as a combined endpoint of acute coronary syndrome, admission for heart failure, or all-cause death., Results: During a mean follow-up of 4.2 ± 2.15 yr, we registered 27 SAE (15 admissions for acute coronary syndrome, eight admissions for heart failure, and four all-cause deaths). Once adjusted for clinical, ExECG, and VS-CMR parameters associated with SAE, the only independent predictors were HRmax in ExECG (HR = 0.98: 95% CI, 0.96-0.99; P = .01) and more extensive stress-induced perfusion defects (PDs, number of segments) in VS-CMR (HR = 1.19: 95% CI, 1.07-1.34; P < .01). Adding HRmax significantly improved the predictive power of the multivariable model for SAE, including PDs (continuous reclassification improvement index: 0.47: 95% CI, 0.10-0.81; P < .05). The annualized SAE rate was 1% (if PD < 2 segments and HRmax > 130 bpm), 2% (if PD < 2 segments and HRmax ≤ 130 bpm), 3.2% (if PD ≥ 2 segments and HRmax > 130 bpm), and 6.3% (if PD ≥ 2 segments and HRmax ≤ 130 bpm), P < .01, for the trend. In patients on β-blocker therapy, however, only PDs in VS-CMR, but not HRmax, predicted SAE., Conclusions: We conclude that ExECG contributes significantly to prognostic information beyond VS-CMR in patients with known or suspected CCS., Competing Interests: Conflicts of Interest: None., (Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Characterization and implications of the dynamics of eosinophils in blood and in the infarcted myocardium after coronary reperfusion.
- Author
-
Rios-Navarro C, Gavara J, Vidal V, Bonanad C, Racugno P, Bayes-Genis A, Miñana G, Husser O, Oltra R, Nuñez J, Chorro FJ, Bodi V, and Ruiz-Sauri A
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Count, Cytokines metabolism, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Myocardial Infarction metabolism, Swine, Eosinophils cytology, Myocardial Infarction blood, Myocardial Infarction surgery, Myocardial Reperfusion
- Abstract
Objective: We characterized the dynamics of eosinophils in blood and in the infarcted myocardium in patients and in a swine model of reperfused myocardial infarction (MI). The association of eosinophil dynamics with various outcomes was assessed., Methods: Serial eosinophil count and pre-discharge cardiac magnetic resonance were carried out in a prospective series of 620 patients with a first ST-elevation MI. In a swine model of reperfused MI, the dynamics of circulating eosinophils and their presence in the infarcted myocardium were determined. In autopsies from chronic MI patients, eosinophils were quantified., Results: Patient eosinophil count sharply decreased 12h post-reperfusion compared to arrival. A lower minimum eosinophil count was associated with more extensive edema, microvascular obstruction, and infarct size as measured by cardiac magnetic resonance, and also with a higher rate of cardiac events (death, re-infarction, or heart failure) during follow-up. In the experimental model, eosinophil count boosted during ischemia and dropped back immediately post-reperfusion. Myocardial samples revealed progressive eosinophil migration into the infarcted myocardium, especially areas with microvascular obstruction. Markers of eosinophil maturation and survival (interleukin-5), degranulation (eosinophil cationic protein) and migration (eotoxin-1) were detected in the blood of patients, and in porcine myocardium. Eosinophil infiltration was detected in autopsies from chronic MI patients., Conclusion: Eosinopenia post-MI was associated with an impaired cardiac structure and adverse events. The decay in circulating eosinophils soon after reperfusion mirrors their migration into the infarcted myocardium, as reflected by their presence in heart samples from swine and patients. Further studies are needed to understanding this unexplored pathway and its therapeutic implications., Competing Interests: The authors have declared no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Diuretic Strategies in Acute Heart Failure and Renal Dysfunction: Conventional vs Carbohydrate Antigen 125-guided Strategy. Clinical Trial Design.
- Author
-
García-Blas S, Bonanad C, Llàcer P, Ventura S, Núñez JM, Sánchez R, Chamorro C, Fácila L, de la Espriella R, Vaquer JM, Cordero A, Roqué M, Ortiz V, Racugno P, Bodí V, Valero E, Santas E, Moreno MDC, Miñana G, Carratalá A, Bondanza L, Payá A, Cardells I, Heredia R, Pellicer M, Valls G, Palau P, Bosch MJ, Raso R, Sánchez A, Bertomeu-González V, Bertomeu-Martínez V, Montagud-Balaguer V, Albiach-Montañana C, Pendás-Meneau J, Marcaida G, Cervantes-García S, San Antonio R, de Mingo E, Chorro FJ, Sanchis J, and Núñez J
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Cardio-Renal Syndrome blood, Cardio-Renal Syndrome complications, Creatinine blood, Heart Failure blood, Heart Failure complications, Humans, Patient Care Planning, Water-Electrolyte Imbalance blood, Water-Electrolyte Imbalance etiology, Acetazolamide therapeutic use, CA-125 Antigen blood, Cardio-Renal Syndrome drug therapy, Chlorthalidone therapeutic use, Diuretics therapeutic use, Furosemide therapeutic use, Heart Failure drug therapy, Membrane Proteins blood, Water-Electrolyte Imbalance drug therapy
- Abstract
Introduction and Objectives: The optimal treatment of patients with acute heart failure (AHF) and cardiorenal syndrome type 1 (CRS-1) is far from being well-defined. Arterial hypoperfusion in concert with venous congestion plays a crucial role in the pathophysiology of CRS-I. Plasma carbohydrate antigen 125 (CA125) has emerged as a surrogate of fluid overload in AHF. The aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical usefulness of CA125 for tailoring the intensity of diuretic therapy in patients with CRS-1., Methods: Multicenter, open-label, parallel clinical trial, in which patients with AHF and serum creatinine ≥ 1.4mg/dL on admission will be randomized to: a) standard diuretic strategy: titration-based on conventional clinical and biochemical evaluation, or b) diuretic strategy based on CA125: high dose if CA125 > 35 U/mL, and low doses otherwise. The main endpoint will be renal function changes at 24 and 72hours after therapy initiation. Secondary endpoints will include: a) clinical and biochemical changes at 24 and 72hours, and b) renal function changes and major clinical events at 30 days., Results: The results of this study will add important knowledge on the usefulness of CA125 for guiding diuretic treatment in CRS-1. In addition, it will pave the way toward a better knowledge of the pathophysiology of this challenging situation., Conclusions: We hypothesize that higher levels of CA125 will identify a patient population with CRS-1 who could benefit from the use of a more intense diuretic strategy. Conversely, low levels of this glycoprotein could select those patients who would be harmed by high diuretic doses., (Copyright © 2017 Sociedad Española de Cardiología. Published by Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Incidence, Outcomes, and Predictors of Ventricular Thrombus after Reperfused ST-Segment-Elevation Myocardial Infarction by Using Sequential Cardiac MR Imaging.
- Author
-
Cambronero-Cortinas E, Bonanad C, Monmeneu JV, Lopez-Lereu MP, Gavara J, de Dios E, Rios C, Perez N, Racugno P, Paya A, Escribano D, Minana G, Pellicer M, Cànoves J, Nunez J, Chorro FJ, Moratal D, and Bodi V
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Coronary Thrombosis epidemiology, Coronary Thrombosis therapy, Female, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Predictive Value of Tests, Prospective Studies, Registries, ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction therapy, Treatment Outcome, Coronary Thrombosis diagnostic imaging, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Purpose To characterize the incidence, outcomes, and predictors of left ventricular (LV) thrombus by using sequential cardiac magnetic resonance (MR) imaging after ST-segment-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). Materials and Methods Written informed consent was obtained from all patients, and the study protocol was approved by the committee on human research. In a cohort of 772 patients with STEMI, 392 (mean age, 58 years; range, 24-89 years) were retrospectively selected who were studied with cardiac MR imaging at 1 week and 6 months. Cardiac MR imaging guided the initiation and withdrawal of anticoagulants. Patients with LV thrombus at 6 months were restudied at 1 year. For predicting the occurrence of LV thrombus, a multiple regression model was applied. Results LV thrombus was detected in 27 of 392 patients (7%): 18 (5%) at 1 week and nine (2%) at 6 months. LV thrombus resolved in 22 of 25 patients (88%) restudied within the first year. During a mean follow-up of 181 weeks ± 168, patients with LV thrombus displayed a very low rate of stroke (0%), peripheral embolism (0%), and severe hemorrhage (n = 1, 3.7%). LV ejection fraction (LVEF) less than 50% (P < .001) and anterior infarction (P = .008) independently helped predict LV thrombus. The incidence of LV thrombus was as follows: (a) nonanterior infarction, LVEF 50% or greater (one of 135, 1%); (b) nonanterior infarction, LVEF less than 50% (one of 50, 2%); (c) anterior infarction, LVEF 50% or greater (two of 92, 2%); and (d) anterior infarction, LVEF less than 50% (23 of 115, 20%) (P < .001 for the trend). Conclusion Cardiac MR imaging contributes information for the diagnosis and therapy of LV thrombus after STEMI. Patients with simultaneous anterior infarction and LVEF less than 50% are at highest risk.
© RSNA, 2017 Online supplemental material is available for this article.- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Prediction of long-term major events soon after a first ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction by cardiovascular magnetic resonance.
- Author
-
Bonanad C, Monmeneu JV, Lopez-Lereu MP, Hervas A, de Dios E, Gavara J, Nunez J, Minana G, Husser O, Paya A, Racugno P, García-Blas S, Chorro FJ, and Bodi V
- Subjects
- Edema complications, Edema pathology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Hemorrhage complications, Hemorrhage pathology, Humans, Male, Microvessels pathology, Middle Aged, Myocardial Infarction complications, Myocardium pathology, Prospective Studies, Registries, Reproducibility of Results, Time, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left complications, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left pathology, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy methods, Myocardial Infarction pathology
- Abstract
Background: Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) predicts combined clinical events in post-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) patients. However, its contribution to predicting long-term major events (ME: cardiac death and non-fatal myocardial infarction [MI]) is unknown. We aimed to assess whether CMR predicts long-term MEs when performed soon after STEMI., Methods and Results: We prospectively recruited 546 STEMI patients between 2004 and 2012. The Left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction (LVEF,%), infarct size (IS), edema, hemorrhage, microvascular obstruction, and myocardial salvage were quantified by CMR at pre-discharge. During a mean follow-up of 840 days, 57 ME events (10%; 23 cardiac deaths, 34 non-fatal MIs) were documented. Patients with MEs has more depressed LVEFs (p<0.001), larger ISs (p<0.001), more extensive edema, hemorrhage, and microvascular obstruction, and lower myocardial salvage (p<0.05). CMR indexes were dichotomized according to the best cutoff values for predicting ME. In a comprehensive multivariate model, a LVEF<40% (HR: 2.3; 95% CI [12, 43]; p= 0.009) and an IS>30% of LV mass (HR: 2.4; 95% CI [13, 44]; p= 0.007) independently doubled the ME risk. The ME risk rates were 6%, 14%, and 30%, respectively (p<0.001) in patients with both the LVEF≥40% and an IS≤30% of LV mass (n=393), those with only one altered value (n=84), and in cases with both the LVEF<40% and an IS>30% of LV mass (n=69). Similar tendencies were observed regarding cardiac deaths (2%, 6%, 14%; p<0.001) and MI (4%, 8%, 16%; p < 0.001)., Conclusions: CMR performed soon after STEMI predicts long-term MEs. Combined analysis of CMR-derived LVEF and IS allows robust stratification of patient outcomes., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Usefulness and safety of a guide catheter extension system for the percutaneous treatment of complex coronary lesions by a transradial approach.
- Author
-
García-Blas S, Núñez J, Mainar L, Miñana G, Bonanad C, Racugno P, Rodríguez JC, Moyano P, and Sanchis J
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Angina, Stable surgery, Cardiac Catheters, Coronary Occlusion, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Myocardial Infarction surgery, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention instrumentation, Radial Artery surgery, Treatment Outcome, Coronary Angiography instrumentation, Coronary Angiography methods, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention methods
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to describe our initial experience with the GuideLiner® catheter (Vascular Solutions Inc.) in the transradial treatment of complex lesions., Materials and Methods: The clinical, angiographic and procedural data of percutaneous coronary interventions where GuideLiner was used during 2013 were collected. The transradial approach was used in all cases. The indication for its use, efficacy and periprocedural complications were determined. Sixteen consecutive procedures (in 15 patients; 12 males and 3 females) were evaluated. The indication for the use of GuideLiner was a difficulty to advance and properly position a stent through a tortuous and/or calcified artery despite using high-support guide catheters or other useful techniques., Results: Of the 16 angiographic procedures, 14 (87.5%) were successful (stent deployment in 13 cases and a drug-eluting balloon in 1 case). Unsuccessful cases were a chronic total occlusion and a diffusely diseased left anterior descendant artery. A type B dissection of a proximal left circumflex artery was the only periprocedural complication., Conclusion: Use of the GuideLiner was an effective and safe technique for the percutaneous treatment of complex coronary lesions in which the adequate progress of angioplasty devices had failed. GuideLiner was particularly helpful when using the transradial approach. Only one minor complication was recorded., (© 2014 S. Karger AG, Basel.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.